VERBS
"Verbs have traditionally been defined as words that show action or state of being."
Taken from:http://www.towson.edu/ows/verbs.htm
Taken from:http://www.towson.edu/ows/verbs.htm
From: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vh7dyQB5SRk
If you want to see and listen the other videos about irregular verbs go here:
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHEjTKRRbrs
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAmznNEwbOo
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLbe_EaP-7A
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHEjTKRRbrs
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAmznNEwbOo
-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLbe_EaP-7A
![Imagen](/uploads/2/4/4/0/24409069/3435753.jpg?409)
35 troublesome irregular verbs
Here's how to make your past tense perfect, and your past-perfect tense sublime.
By BY: Mark Nichol
Posted: August 7, 2012
In English, many verbs adapt simply to the past tense with the attachment of either -d or -ed, as in brake/braked or walk/walked. These are called regular verbs.Many other verbs, however, undergo more significant alterations to transform from references to present-tense actions to those representing actions performed in the past. Such words are called irregular verbs.
The simple past, the tense form that describes what previously occurred, is fairly straightforward once one assimilates the forms for each irregular verb. But complications set in when the past participle—a verb assisted by an auxiliary verb, or a past-tense form of the verb to be—is employed.
Some past-participle forms are easily distinguished from their simple-past counterparts, as in the case of ate/eaten, for example, or saw/seen ("I ate already"/"I had eaten already"; "We saw the movie"/"We had seen the movie"). Others, however, often literally give writers pause.
Taken from: http://www.ragan.com/Main/Articles/35_troublesome_irregular_verbs_45324.aspx
Here's how to make your past tense perfect, and your past-perfect tense sublime.
By BY: Mark Nichol
Posted: August 7, 2012
In English, many verbs adapt simply to the past tense with the attachment of either -d or -ed, as in brake/braked or walk/walked. These are called regular verbs.Many other verbs, however, undergo more significant alterations to transform from references to present-tense actions to those representing actions performed in the past. Such words are called irregular verbs.
The simple past, the tense form that describes what previously occurred, is fairly straightforward once one assimilates the forms for each irregular verb. But complications set in when the past participle—a verb assisted by an auxiliary verb, or a past-tense form of the verb to be—is employed.
Some past-participle forms are easily distinguished from their simple-past counterparts, as in the case of ate/eaten, for example, or saw/seen ("I ate already"/"I had eaten already"; "We saw the movie"/"We had seen the movie"). Others, however, often literally give writers pause.
Taken from: http://www.ragan.com/Main/Articles/35_troublesome_irregular_verbs_45324.aspx
Irregular Verbs
Here you can find a lot of information about the verbs:
http://www.towson.edu/ows/verbs.htm
http://www.usingenglish.com/reference/irregular-verbs/
http://www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/regular-verbs-list.htm
http://www.towson.edu/ows/verbs.htm
http://www.usingenglish.com/reference/irregular-verbs/
http://www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/regular-verbs-list.htm